Example sentences of "[conj] [adj] [noun] give " in BNC.

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1 ( 7 ) In the event that a Member dies or in the event that the name of a Member is struck off or removed from the roll or his practising certificate is suspended or expires without being renewed or where a Member is a registered foreign lawyer his name is struck off the register of foreign lawyers or his registration is suspended or cancelled or ( where a Member is a Recognised Body ) its recognition is revoked or expires , the Directors may require the Member or , as the case may be , his legal personal representatives , trustee in bankruptcy , liquidator , administrator or administrative receiver to give a Transfer Notice in respect of all the Shares then registered in the name of the Member or deceased member .
2 ( 7 ) In the event that a Member dies or in the event that the name of a Member is struck off or removed from the roll or his practising certificate is suspended or expires without being renewed or where a Member is a registered foreign lawyer his name is struck off the register of foreign lawyers or his registration is suspended or cancelled or ( where a Member is a Recognised Body ) its recognition is revoked or expires , the Directors may require the Member or , as the case may be , his legal personal representatives , trustee in bankruptcy , liquidator , administrator or administrative receiver to give a Transfer Notice in respect of all the Shares then registered in the name of the Member or deceased member .
3 The amount paid would be determined according to a centrally agreed formula , and the budget would be controlled by a manager who would purchase services from whichever public or private agency gave the best value for money .
4 Many voluntary organisations depend heavily on those with technical , secretarial , accountancy , fund-raising , carpentry , building or professional skills giving their advice free of charge .
5 The pendant or hanging variety give good overall light but tend to flatten shadows and do not provide enough light by which to read or work comfortably .
6 Any breach or suspected breach gives rise to a policy indemnity question .
7 A. Horses should NEVER be ridden when a cough or runny nose gives any hint or suspicion of a ‘ brewing ’ infection .
8 Brand loyalty is also said by marketers to make the process of evaluation and choice less difficult , particularly where this process gives rise to anxiety or uncertainty on the part of the consumer .
9 Was enough window space or in-store display given to the product to support the advertisement ?
10 The question needs to be asked , whether such limitations would be valid on moral , ethical or social grounds given the disparities that exist in living standards …
11 Working in a manufacturing company , or as a solicitor or chartered accountant gives invaluable experience .
12 This ability to tie up the excess hydrogen ions introduced by acid precipitation is largely determined by the composition of the bedrock on which the lakes and soils form , with hard , impervious igneous or metamorphic bedrock giving rise to low calcium and magnesium content producing the most susceptible situation .
13 A herbal cream or fragrant oil gives a soothing massage
14 A parents ' evening in late September or early October gives time for the class to settle and for the teacher to get to know something about the child .
15 Poring over a world atlas or 1:50,000 sheet gives me as much pleasure as actually visiting the places I dream about .
16 The criminal law defines only some types of violence as criminal assault ; it excludes verbal assaults that can , and sometimes do , break a person 's spirit ; it excludes forms of assault whose injuries become apparent years later , such as those resulting from working in a polluted factory environment where the health risk was known to the employer but concealed from the employee ( Swartz 1975 ) ; it excludes ‘ compulsory ’ drug-therapy or electric-shock treatment given to ‘ mentally disturbed ’ patients or prisoners who are denied the civilized rights to refuse such beneficial medical help ( Mitford 1977 ; Szasz 1970,1977a , 1977b ) ; it excludes chemotherapy prescribed to control ‘ naughty ’ schoolboys , but includes physically hitting teachers ( Box 1981b ; Schrag and Divoky 1981 ) .
17 Even if we have few possessions or little wealth to give away , may we seek out opportunities to give of our time , our skills and our concern to those who need us .
18 Each turn along the coast path reveals a beautiful sandy cove , or jagged rocks giving lie to the notion that this is just a pretty landscape .
19 Where either party gives particulars RSC Ord 18 , r12(7) provides that both request and particulars must be incorporated in the same document and go into the bundle of pleadings immediately after the pleading to which they refer .
20 You can lay cold-roll macadam over old concrete , paving or existing macadam to give it a new surface , but it 's difficult to lay over hardcore with an ordinary garden roller — you need to put down two layers and use a hired plate vibrator to get a good result .
21 A synonym occurs when the application of the randomising formula to two or more keys gives the same address .
22 ‘ They take any handicapped person — mentally or physically , either long term , or short term to give carers a break . ’
23 The Dances are typical of families where one person gives up his or her life to look after another .
24 We arrived at a Roman Catholic church where kind ladies gave us food and blankets , and soon we were all cosily asleep on the hard church floor .
25 Weaknesses relating to board control included : an over-dominant and over-ambitious chief executive or executive team ; inadequate or biased information given to the board , infrequent board meetings or inadequate recording of board decisions ; imbalanced boards in terms of skills ; strategies based on short-term share price rather than solidity of real earnings ; and inadequate systems of financial control .
26 They turned into a quieter street where open shutters gave a view of craftsmen bent over worktables placed at the front of their shops to catch the best of the morning light .
27 She would instantly see that a plastic spoon proffered in open-hearted supplication and tender humility was more beautiful by far than any thorny rose or second-hand diamond given to her with a leer of anticipation .
28 The rhythmic cell is departed from at only two points : the end , where longer notes give a moment of repose ; and at mid-point ( the end of the first sentence ) , where the two quavers of the motif are extended to six .
29 Otherwise we 're out of sight and out of mind — or just extras to give the appearance of integration .
30 Similarly , the public but not the press can be kept out of an adult court while a child or young person gives evidence in relation to a sex offence .
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